 Bobby Sullivan, a 21-year volunteer of the Pikeville Medical Center, passed away on Friday, July 22, leaving those he worked with at the hospital to mourn his passing and remember his life. Bobby Sullivan volunteered at Pikeville Medical Center for 21 years. He had a little over 11,000 hours. So Bobby basically helped with our customer service. He assisted me with the volunteers, with our teens during the summer program. So he was instrumental in a lot of different areas within the hospital whenever it comes to greeting our guests and making sure that people got where they needed to go to. Despite his physical disabilities, Bobby made an enormous impact on the people he worked with and the people he interacted with at the medical center. Bobby Sullivan made a large impact. No matter where he went, he was always known as little Bobby, but he always made a big impression because he had the biggest heart. So with his impact, it was enormous to our patients, our staff, our teen volunteers, the patients' families. Everywhere he went, he made a difference. I think people will remember Bobby because he had such a warm heart, a sense of humor. He never met a stranger, so he was always warm and welcoming. But he was eager to learn, so he would ask a lot of questions and get to know that person. So he, like I said, just was a great spirit. Experienced heart specialist and subspecialist collaborating for the benefit of your care. Top 10% national hospital rankings for patient safety and heart attack and heart failure treatment. The technology is skilled to perform extraordinary complex, minimally invasive cardiac, electrophysiology, interventional and structural heart surgeries. This is a heart and vascular institute at Pikeville Medical Center. When it comes to your heart, place your care in our hands. Bobby didn't just make an impact on the workers of PMC, but also the volunteers, some of them as young as 14. Bobby was very instrumental in playing a role model to our teen volunteers, and you know that's so instrumental. We started age 14 with volunteering, so he always said, Danilu, we need to make sure that they know how to act when they're at the hospital and be professional and know that this is their hospital and it's for their community. And he wanted them to see what they could do for their community. He didn't want them to just think volunteering was volunteering. He wanted them to know that they made a difference. And so that was his legacy, I think, with that. So throughout those 21 years, he helped me with basically 21 summers of all these teens coming in. So that's hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of these teens that he impacted. Being him sometimes would joke that some of them are doctors and lawyers now or nurses, and it really made him proud to know that he was a part of that. A memorial was held at the Pikeville Medical Center for Bobby following his passing where those he worked with showed up to remember him. A wreath and photo of Bobby currently set at the main entrance of PMC in his memory. For Mountaintop News, I'm Kelsey Dean.